Thoroughly Modern Emancipation
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This was a day in which Lisa was truly privileged. It wasn't often she
was permitted, let alone invited, to watch television with her mistress,
but on this day Madam Colette granted Lisa the privilege of kneeling
in front of the screen-naked as always, except for her slave-collar, as
clothes were such an unnecessary luxury-while her mistress searched
for the relevant news channel. When she selected it, the current story
was a report on the Party Caucuses that were a prelude to the
upcoming Presidential elections. But this wasn't what Madam Colette
wanted her slave to watch. What possible relevance could it have for
Lisa? No society would ever enfranchise its slaves. Emancipation has
to precede enfranchisement and, however much Lisa's mistress might
campaign for her rights, there wasn't much likelihood of that
happening any time soon.
It wasn't this news item, nor the one that followed regarding
the scandalous murder of a Senator's daughter, but the next feature in
which Lisa's mistress, Colette Tuchman-Lee, was once again
interviewed for her views on the matter for which she'd campaigned
for so many years. And this was especially pertinent to Lisa, as it
related to slaves' civil rights and their owners' legal responsibilities.
Lisa was fortunate indeed in being the property of a mistress who was
in many ways the model slave-owner; one, moreover, renowned
throughout the Union for her restless campaigning on behalf of the
rights and welfare of slaves. This was bold of her as it was a matter
generally regarded as the private concern of their owners. What does
ownership mean if you can't do precisely what you want with what
you own? Property rights surely took precedence over moral scruples.
And where would the economy be if the net benefit of slave labour
became the net cost of managing unemployed human resources?
Lisa speculated that Madam Colette's concern with the
complex issue of slavery and human rights might have originated from
the fact that, like the original slaves shipped over from Africa, her
mistress was Black. And, although the majority of slaves in America
were still mostly Black, Asian or Latino, Lisa was White. She was
legitimate booty from the United States' overwhelming victory in the
recent war against the former British colony of Newfoundland. Lisa
was sometimes tempted to agree that the briefly independent nation
into which she was born was less prosperous than its aggressive
neighbour simply because it still adhered to the moral scruples of the
much diminished British Empire.
But for now, Lisa had to hold her breath and not fidget during
the panel discussion her mistress was so intent on her seeing. And the
topic of this was Colette Tuchman-Lee's current campaign to transfer
the terms of slavery from life-time servitude to limited-term indenture.
"I know you mean well, Colette," said John Murray, the man
chosen to represent the opposing view, as he puffed clouds of smoke
from his pipe into the television studio. "Who wouldn't want to
improve the lot of those few poor wretches who suffer from
unwarranted maltreatment by a reprehensible minority of slave-
owners? But we must consider carefully the unintended consequences
of any supposed reform to a successful economic model. Recall the
reforms made early last century that repealed the practise of mandating
children into a state of slavery if their parents were slaves. Although
this resulted in such children being freed from inheriting the servitude
of their parents, as happened to your ancestors ..."
"Is this so, Colette?" interrupted the host, Emily Blackwell,
whose towering bouffant hair dominated the centre of the screen.
Colette nodded. "I'm a third generation African-American
citizen."
"...But this policy," John Murray continued, stabbing the stem
of his pipe in the air. "This policy had the unintended effect of
boosting the international slave trade which had become almost
moribund when the Europeans and Antipodeans quit their role in the
traditional triangular trade. There was now a huge demand for fresh
labour from the traditional African sources and, with the European
Empires so weakened after the Eurasian Wars, the United States were
able to take full advantage of the bountiful supply and thereby revive
the flow of human traffic. And now, of course, there are more nations
in the world who practise and benefit from the commerce than ever
before."
"So, Colette," said Emily Blackwell turning away from the
puffs of pipe-smoke to her right. "How do you answer those who say
that the American economy can't hope to prosper if there's any further
liberalisation in the conditions of mandatory servitude? Can slave-
owners be expected to shoulder further burdens on top of the property-
owning taxes and regular slave inspections? What about those whose
livelihood relies on unhindered human trade from Africa, Asia and
South America?"
"I'd be the last one to deny that there's been progress in recent
years," said the Colette on television while Lisa was aware that the
Colette on the sofa behind her was watching her slave's reaction as
much as her own image on the screen. "Slaves are now permitted to
have sexual relationships with one another: even same sex
relationships. The ban on casual racism against free citizens has been
extended to apply to slaves, however little practical difference this has
made. And it may well be that the institution of slavery will be here for
many years to come..."
"And are you relaxed about that?" asked the host.
"Relaxed?" said a clearly startled Colette. "Of course not. The
institution is barbaric and inhumane. It should have ended centuries
ago. How can it be right for one person to be born free and the other to
become another person's property?"
"And you claim that you're not a socialist?" John Murray
interceded. "That is communist talk. You want to liberate the slaves
and then what are they to do? Starve? You want to annul the contract
between employer and employee which is different only in kind from
that between a slave-owner and his property. There'd be riots in the
streets of New York. Taxes would become even more excessive. The
American economy would be in a tailspin."
"I've said this many times before and I don't know why I have
to keep saying it," said Colette. "I am not a socialist or a subscriber to
any kind of un-American activity. But I do believe in a compassionate
and ethical relationship with regards to slaves..."
"And this is why you're campaigning for further legislative
reforms to limit slavery to a fixed term," said Emily Blackwell in an
obvious attempt to steer the discussion away from the general towards
the specific. "Do you have political support for this?"
"I have bi-partisan backing from both sides of the House for a
review of the terms of indenture and Presidential Candidates from both
the Democratic-Republican and Federalist Parties have agreed to back
my proposal to institute a State Pension for slaves that absolves the
slave-owners' obligation of care for their property once it becomes
economically unproductive..."
"...Paid no doubt by yet more and higher taxes!" interjected
John Murray.
"And how do you answer criticism that your reforms only
further penalise hard-working slave-owners who're already struggling
to make ends meet?" asked the host with an inflexion in her voice that
suggested she was about to bring the discussion to a close. "That you
represent only the interests of property and not of property-holders?"
"That's ridiculous," said the Colette on television firmly while
Lisa's mistress in the living room patted her slave on the head. "As a
slave-owner myself, how can it be said that I don't represent the
interests of both sides?"
"Indeed," said Emily Blackwell as the camera focused on her.
"Well, thank you, Colette. And, of course, thank you also, John. And
now we return to the fast-developing story of the hunt for John Booth,
the alleged killer of the daughter of Federalist Senator Boston
Corbett..."
"Well, Lisa, what do you think?" asked the Colette on the sofa
as she set the television sound to mute. "You may speak frankly."
Lisa had long ago discovered that diplomacy was always
required when addressing her mistress. Although she wouldn't be
admonished or punished for saying something Miss Tuchman-Lee
disagreed with, she was sure that the next time she incurred her
mistress' displeasure and earned a beating, her apparent disloyalty
would be repaid in extra welts and bruises. However enlightened
Colette was with regards to the slave-owner's responsibility of care,
she also was a firm believer in the merits of discipline.
"I'm sure that limited-term indenture would be a great step
forward, Madam," said Lisa, although she'd much prefer to earn her
freedom a long time before the end of her term of economic utility.
"And you don't think Murray is right to accuse me of being a
socialist?" Colette asked with her eyes slightly narrowed.
This could be a trap, Lisa thought. She was often sure that her
mistress was being disingenuous when she claimed that the beatings
she administered were solely for Lisa's own good, so she had to be
sure that her answers mightn't arouse her mistress' displeasure. In any
case, there was a good reason why Lisa could never be open about her
views on socialism. It was as a result of America's displeasure at
Newfoundland electing a Social Democratic government-
Communism in America's Backyard, as it was called-that Lisa's
home nation, still nominally a member of the enfeebled British
Commonwealth, was invaded and she, along with everyone else who'd
resisted the invasion, was pressed into slavery. And now
Newfoundland-the last sliver of land north of Venezuela that had so
far resisted the American juggernaut-was soon to be incorporated
into the United States of America:.
"You're not a socialist, Madam," said Lisa carefully. "You're
motivated by a sense of justice and fairness. And, of course, by the
dictates of your faith..."
"Well, less by my faith than I should be," said Colette with an
indulgent sigh. Although a Bible was prominent in her living room and
a Crucifix was nailed above her bed, she very rarely attended chapel
and her faith was very much subordinate to her politics. "And, as a
slave, do you think slaves as a whole will welcome my proposed
reforms?"
Lisa tried not to betray her discomfort at this question. Her
mistress obviously believed that Lisa could speak for all slaves, when
in fact Lisa hardly knew any others at all. She was rarely permitted out
of the house unattended by her mistress and she had little in common
with those slaves who visited the house and who discreetly lowered
their eyes when they noticed that Lisa was unclothed. Like Colette,
most such slaves were Black (but rarely accorded the same honorific
of African-American). And those who weren't Black were of Asian
origin: reflecting the extensive range of developing nations who
resourced the lucrative international slave trade.
"I'm sure they will, Madam," said Lisa. "There can be no slave
in the world who doesn't appreciate what you're trying to do for
them."
Except perhaps Lisa.
It was true that Colette treated her slave rather better than most
slave-owners. Lisa was rarely left as badly scarred from a whipping as
many of the slaves she'd seen, whose backs were an ugly mess of
raised welts and not-yet-healed wounds. She'd never suffered the
ignominy of being manacled to the public stocks and pelted with
mouldy fruit and toilet waste by the children of those too poor to
afford slaves of their own. But on the other hand, she didn't appreciate
being the sex toy of a mistress who believed that her ownership of
Lisa's services licensed her to the use of her body whenever there was
nothing better available. Lisa had never been tempted to Sapphic love
when a teenager in Newfoundland and after all these years she was
sure that it was at best the pleasure of close physical companionship
rather than sexual ecstasy she ever felt on those occasions when
Colette was disappointed by one of the men or women in her life.
Not that being second-best to any of Colette's lovers made Lisa
feel better for the groping and physical invasion she had to endure on
all these (lesser) occasions of physical intimacy.
"You must understand, Colette," said Tatyana, the nearest to a
regular lover that Lisa's mistress had, as she lounged on the chaise
longue with a cigarette screwed into the end of an ebony holder.
"Although the serfs in the Russian Empire aren't free by any stretch of
the imagination, they aren't slaves and the Duma cannot be accused of
hypocrisy in siding with the European Union when it agitates for the
abolition of the International Slave Trade."
Colette lay across the divan with her head on Tatyana's lap
while Lisa knelt in attendance on the bare floor: nude as she always
was when her mistress' Russian lover visited. Like her mistress,
Tatyana Petrovna was an active campaigner for civil rights although
her concern was for that 80% of the Russian Empire's population who
were born unfree rather than that proportion of the whole world sold
into slavery by poor nations and bought as property by the wealthy: of
which the United States, from the Hudson Bay to the Panama Canal,
was the most prominent. She was also in love with Colette and only
Lisa's stated preference for men stood in the way of their living
together as a couple.
"Serfs are slaves, Tatty," said Colette firmly. "Worse than
slaves. In America, the children of slaves are born free whereas serfs
inherit their status..."
"Not that many American slave-owners allow their slaves to
have children," said Tatyana. "It was only because the institution of
slavery resembled serfdom that during America's war with Russia over
the Bering Straits..."
"Which we won."
"...which you won-over a century ago-and you still don't
know what to do with your Siberian territories... But it was only
because America and its Democracy wished to appear the more
enlightened empire compared to Russia's constitutional monarchy..."
"Where most people can't vote."
"...where serfs can no more vote than can slaves in the United
States. It was one-upmanship in the days when America was still
uncertain whether it was the junior partner to Europe..."
"Which tore itself apart not once but twice..."
"...and which both Russia and America left well alone," agreed
Tatyana. "And the result of your change of policy is that countries like
China and India are now just as much at war with their own people to
resource fresh slaves as African nations have always been, and are just
as imprisoned by a cycle of civil war and banditry."
Nowadays, Lisa's political and historical education mostly
came from these conversations between her mistress and her lover as
they became steadily drunker and less coherent before they finally
went to bed together, though they didn't always put off their
lovemaking until then, much to Lisa's undiminished embarrassment.
Lisa knew that, in American terms, her mistress and her Russian lover
were unusually well informed about the world and liberal in their
opinions, but they were both much more conservative than was normal
in what was so briefly the Social Democratic Republic of
Newfoundland, despite the cold winds of reactionary opinion drifting
over the Gulf of St Lawrence from the American States of Labrador
and Quebec.
Colette freely shared her property with her close friends and
this generosity extended to her slave. Tonight was such an evening
when Lisa was expected to provide sexual services to both women
that, despite her sometimes obvious reluctance, they most often
demanded. It might well have been because Lisa was so reluctant that
Tatyana, for all her compassion for the down-trodden in her own
country, took such great pleasure in licking Lisa's pale freckled skin;
forced her fist up the crack between Lisa's dark red-tinged pubic hair;
thrust a strapped-on dildo repeatedly into Lisa's anus while Colette
nibbled on her nipples; slapped her pale buttocks until they were
redder than the cheeks on her face were from embarrassment; and the
two women made demands of Lisa to lick, caress and sometimes even
fuck either one or both of them.
"Oh! She doesn't like it, does she?" said Tatyana with a
chuckle as she tugged Lisa backwards by her hair and pushed three
fingers into the slave's arse.
"I'm sure she does really," said Colette, perhaps from a sense
of guilt as she let loose globules of saliva between Lisa's legs that
trickled through the tangled pubic hairs to help her lover make the
desired ingress.
And when Lisa groaned, more from pain than pleasure, this
was taken as evidence that she did enjoy it and further redoubled her
mistress' predations on her body.
If Lisa's mistress was the model slave-owner, wondered Lisa,
what were the others like?
All she had to go on was the evidence of other slaves' beatings,
but even if these weren't so visible, there was how slaves were so
cowed, so beaten down: their eyes averted, the reflective wince
whenever there was a sudden movement and a shuffling, undignified,
unassertive manner that reinforced the impression amongst slave-
owners-and those who'd dearly love to be able to afford the cost of a
slave-that slaves were somehow subhuman and deserved their
treatment as one step in status below household pets (but still, perhaps,
above farm animals).
And what had Lisa done to deserve her enslavement?
It was because she'd been on the wrong side of the mass
demonstrations that flowed into the streets of Newfoundland's towns
and cities when the American troops parachuted in. What chance had
Lisa against helicopter gunships, remote-controlled drones and the
military prowess of the most feared and most wealthy nation in the
world? At least, she'd avoided the fate of the thousands who'd been
gunned down in Downtown St. John's: news of which hadn't troubled
any news program she'd seen since becoming an American slave.
Lisa was eventually allowed to retire to her own bed, which
was rather luxurious compared to that in her Newfoundland home. But
then, in terms of slave welfare, Colette did indeed practice what she
believed and which she had little difficulty in affording. Nonetheless,
no feather-down duvet or memory-foam mattress could entirely
compensate for the stinging pain on her buttocks and the raw ache in
her violated crotch. But one advantage of a busy day spent scrubbing,
vacuum cleaning, dusting, cooking, washing and ironing, let alone the
other exertions she'd made for the benefit of her mistress, was that she
was always tired when she went to bed and fell asleep almost
immediately.
When she arose to do her morning duties before her mistress
stirred from her bed, she was startled to find Tatyana sitting on a
kitchen stool wearing only her unflattering underwear and with a
cigarette in her hand. Normally, her mistress was awake long before
her Russian lover. At first, Lisa thought that Tatyana had got up early
only to realise that, in fact, she hadn't as yet settled down to sleep. She
and Colette must have had a very passionate night together and one
Lisa was glad not to have accompanied to the end.
Tatyana was still tipsy and she supported a glass of red wine in
her palm which she swilled around desultorily rather than sipped from.
She smiled at Lisa as she walked naked and shoeless into the kitchen.
"Hello, dear," said Tatyana with an affectionate term of
endearment she'd never used before. "I hope you're well?"
Lisa nodded while wondering whether this was the Russian
woman's way of apologising for her rough treatment the night before.
But no. That was something neither Tatyana nor her mistress would
ever apologise for.
"Colette and I were talking about you last night," said Tatyana.
"You know, about you being a slave and everything. She told me that
she never lets you out of the house unaccompanied. Is that right,
dear?"
Lisa nodded again. Where was this leading to?
"So, let's give you a moment of freedom, shall we, dear?"
announced Tatyana. "Like a little bird. Free to flap your little wings.
Take flight as you circle round the room let loose from your cage.
You'd like that, wouldn't you?"
Despite her fear of the consequences of even a moment of
expressing herself openly, Lisa nodded. What she wanted more than
anything was Freedom and a way to escape forever and return to
sanctuary in Newfoundland.
"So, let's get you dressed and out of the house before your
mistress...er, before Colette wakes up. Though that's not likely to be
for a long time, I'm sure. Do you have any clothes?"
"Not suitable ones, madam," said Lisa. Like most slaves, the
way she dressed made her subordinate role very apparent. No free
woman would choose to wear the functional unbecoming outfits worn
by slaves unless they'd lost their freedom by other means and were
thus incarcerated for their crimes.
"I anticipated that and it's fortunate that I always keep a change
of clothes here," said Tatyana. "You never know what might happen
when I visit and, indeed, in truth you don't..." She swirled her wine
about in the glass and grimaced slightly after taking a sip which at this
time in the morning no longer tasted so pleasant. "Colette proposed to
me, you know. We're going to get married. We might have to go to
Russia to perform the ceremony: they're a lot more liberal about things
like that in the Empire, you know, ever since the Tsarina came out
publicly."
Tatyana pulled out a dress and shoes she'd hidden under the
kitchen table. She'd been waiting for Lisa and had evidently already
made arrangements. Lisa could sense a relentless flow of events that
only her fear of punishment could bring to a premature end. There was
no underwear, but that wasn't what really bothered Lisa who hadn't
worn such things for a long time.
"Do you have a scarf, madam?" she asked.
"A scarf? It's not cold outside, is it?"
"For my neck..."
"Oh, the collar. Of course. Yes," she said as she walked into
the hallway with Lisa trailing behind carrying the shoes and dress in
her arms as if she was about to lay them down on a bed. "Ah, here's a
nice silk scarf. All the way from the Empire's Polish territories. Pretty
isn't it, dear?"
Lisa nodded.
"Well, put it all on and get out the door before I change my
mind, dear," said Tatyana. "We'll see how much your mistress really
is the thoroughly modern liberal, how much she really believes in the
emancipation of slaves, what she really thinks..."
And then Tatyana did a truly amazing thing. She let Lisa get
dressed and then unlatched the front door and opened it wide. Outside,
Lisa could see the tree-lined avenue tempting her with its suburban
tranquillity. Swallows were swooping through the sky. Grey squirrels
were gambolling in the trees and racing across the well-mown lawns.
The early morning sun was casting long shadows in which could be
seen daisies, tulips and daffodils. A small van drove past with its
delivery of fresh croissants and groceries.
"Come on, then!" said Tatyana.
Fuck the consequences, thought Lisa. How many such
opportunities would she ever have in a life of slavery that stretched
ahead until death or, if Colette had her way, until tax-funded slave
retirement when she was no longer economically viable. She strode
forward, not bothering to look behind her or at Tatyana who was still
holding open the door, and then she was walking beyond the door-
steps, through the metal gate between her mistress' brownstone house
and the avenue beyond, and continued to stride in the direction she
knew would soonest take her off Fairmount Avenue and to where she
might truly escape.
She walked fast-or as fast as she could in the slightly-too-
large stack-heeled shoes that Tatyana had given her-in the attempt to
put as much distance as she could between her and her mistress' home.
She couldn't walk as far as Newfoundland, of course. Not that she was
certain that the newly rechristened Territory of Newfoundland was the
right place to go, though that was where her friends and family lived;
or at least those who'd not been shot or hadn't also become enslaved.
Perhaps she should head south, though, of course, all of the Caribbean
and most of Central America were either states incorporated into the
Union, like the States of Belize and Yucatan, or were dependent
territories awaiting incorporation. Perhaps given that she was still on
America's East coast she should head further in that direction across
the Atlantic Ocean to the European Union, the only part of the world
other than the Antipodes and Japan that had entirely renounced the
institutions of slavery.
As she walked along, she could see daily life in the city as the
sun began its slow climb. Commuters emerged from their homes and
strode purposefully towards the subway or train station to take them to
the office. The less wealthy, but still free, were opening shops, driving
by in delivery vans, or walking with purpose but not a lot of haste to
their places of work. But those who were not free, the slaves of
America, they were the ones who weren't going anywhere, or if they
did, generally in the company of their masters, their mistresses or their
masters' children.
The slaves didn't need collars to betray their status, although,
by law, all of them had to. Their downtrodden demeanour, their
shuffling stooping locomotion, their lowered heads and turned-away
faces, their ingrained habits of servitude reinforced by fear of the
consequences of transgression: all these were evidence as much as any
collar, chain or manacle of a state of subservience. Most were black or
brown. Many were Asian, from the slave-exporting nations to the
south of Russia and to the north of Australia that as Tatyana had
remarked were supplementing Africa's traditional role as the main
source of human traffic. And there were those, like Lisa herself, who
came from the New World, so long considered the importer rather than
the exporter of slaves: the result of America's aggressive prosecution
of the Monroe doctrine that had made most of South America a
bottomless source of war booty and had cowed the last vestiges of
independence in the Northern Hemisphere.
Slaves were denied even basic dignity. How many freemen or
freewomen were allowed to be naked in public gaze? Even in the
public stocks which could be found in every public square or
municipal park, only the slaves were denied clothes even though a free
person guilty of crimes for which a slave would expect immediate
death by hanging or lynching was just as likely to be punished in what
was considered a cost-effective deterrent to crime. At least they no
longer exhibited decapitated heads outside government buildings for
the crimes of treason or un-American activities.
Lisa strode hurriedly onward as if expecting to be stopped at
any moment. She hurried through the parks, keeping in the shadow of
the trees that lined the paths. She strode alongside the shop-windows
that exhibited riches rare in Newfoundland but were on promiscuous
display for the much wealthier citizens of the United States. She
walked beneath the suspension bridges that spanned the river. She
followed the path of the freeway along which trucks roared by. She
walked beside the administrative offices of the Federal and State
governments, whose uneasy relationship with one another caused more
debate and disagreement amongst American voters than ever had the
institution of slavery that a minority like Colette Tuchman-Lee
campaigned against.
And eventually she paused, as she had to, right by a monument
to the fallen soldiers in the Japanese War: the sole armed conflict in
which America had failed to triumph and thereby still remained an
affront to its national pride. Opposite her was a statue of President
Joseph McCarthy, one of America's most liberal presidents, and just
beside that an idealistic portrayal of Liberty with her sword unsheathed
and the slogan beneath her bare sandaled feet: "Give me liberty or give
me death." The monument beside and above her showed brave
American soldiers, with their rifles thrust forward and bearing a look
of determination, little knowing how desperately the Japanese would
defend themselves. Indeed, so entrenched was American resentment of
its defeat that had Japan not invented the Atom Bomb at about the
same time as America and Russia, who knows how history since then
might have been.
"And at last she sits down!" said a voice from another figure
that towered above Lisa. "I thought she'd never stop walking."
"She's led us a real fucking merry chase, ain't she?" said a
figure beside him.
Lisa looked up with fear and apprehension and she was right to
do so. Just above her were two policemen both armed with gun and
nightstick.
"Are you talking about me?" she asked nervously.
"Who the fuck else is there, Lisa," said the first policeman.
"Did you really think you'd get away with a collar round your
neck, you little slut," said the other. "Or don't they have chip implants
in fucking Newfoundland?"
"What's going to happen to me?" implored Lisa.
"You should be fucking glad you've got that do-gooding cunt
Tuchman-Lee as a mistress, bitch," continued the second policeman. "I
don't know what the fuck you should expect..."
"Fifty lashes and a week in solitary at the very least I'd have
thought."
"Instead it'll be nothing worse than a couple of hours in the
stocks..."
"...And you, as a white bitch..."
"Like a fucking whore!"
"...can expect some leniency I guess. Nothing worse than a
few rotten tomatoes and a mouthful of sewage..."
"...or horse manure."
"You can consider yourself fucking lucky!"
"And I bet your fucking nigger dyke mistress ain't even gonna
give you the beating you deserve when you're returned to her..."
"In fact, I bet she'll stop at the whip..."
"Me? I'd fucking cripple a slave of mine who'd absconded like
you did, Lisa."
"So, come along now, dear, and don't cause any trouble."
"Because, believe me, any fucking excuse will do..."
And so Lisa's brief moment of freedom was over all too soon.
She had to face up to the fact that there was no likelihood of her ever
being free for as long as she was a slave in the United States of
America.
And how could it ever have been any different?